In the Catholic scandal, he told PR News, he represented a particular order of the Catholic Church that wanted to avoid being mentioned in connection with the scandal. "Our call came from an order in Rome a week before the bishops were scheduled to have their meeting there," he said. "Half an hour into a call with the order's American schools, one of the priests said, 'We cannot leave the seminary. It is surrounded by camera crews.' One of the fathers on the phone from the United States [in Connecticut] said, 'We have camera crews here, too, and we cannot leave.'" As a result of his work, he boasted, "The story, which should have been the global focus of news, virtually never appeared. There was a tiny bit on TV and one story in a little local paper, but the story died away, and a few weeks later, there was a favorable story about the order on a New York TV network."

Levick is the author of a book, titled Stop the Presses: The Litigation PR Desk Reference, ISBN 0975998501.

Income and Employee Totals

O'Dwyer's PR lists Levick as earning $8,547,217 in net fees in 2007, up 28% on the previous year. It notes the firm has 37 employees. [2]

PR Week ranked Levick as the forty-fourth largest independent PR agency in the United States in 2008, with 2007 revenue of $8,547,217, a 28% increase from the previous year's total revenue of $6,672,644. The ranking also notes its staff total of 53 (2006 total: 24), with $161,268 in revenue per employee.[3]